!! FridgeBrilliance* Reuben's special skill has always been making sandwiches... until ''WesternAnimation/LeroyAndStitch'', when he successfully repairs a space shipwreck and gets it off the ground. Making a sandwich or (any other snacks) is sometimes called ''fixing'' a sandwich, etc.* In the movie, Stitch is sentenced to exile on an asteroid. In "The Asteroid", Stitch and co. travel to an asteroid to destroy it, only to find it inhabited by a lone alien. Now we have an idea about how he got there.* In "Mr. Stenchy", it's shown that Stitch lacks a [[GoodAngelBadAngel Good Angel]] [[BuffySpeak shoulder conscious]], instead of having two Bad Angels. Since he wasn't designed to have one, [[MoralityPet Lilo]] became his voice of reason.* The Four Crossover Episodes actually suggest good explanations for the series' little inconsistencies that wouldn't be possible to be explained otherwise:** The Night Marchers from "Belle" seem a little out of place in a Sci-fi series since they are clearly ghosts, but if you take into account Jake Long lives in the same universe, they could just be magical beings that are on the run.** Technology like the 'automatic dehydrator' from "627" seem kinda odd... until you realize that they share the same world of ''Kim Possible'', where Weather Machines are sold like cars. Who's to say that this isn't the same manufacturer or a similar fashion?** In fact, this could even explain [[WesternAnimation/{{Recess}} Spinelli]]'s father is revealed to be a secret agent in-universe, or whom Cobra works for now. Maybe both are agents of Global Justice from ''Kim Possible''?** And it also justifies the existence of Warmonga and her people (along with the Area 51 aliens seen in ''Rufus vs. Commodore Puddles'') in ''Kim Possible''. It's the same universe of Lilo and Stitch, where extra-terrestrial civilizations are undoubtedly real.* Jumba's increased use of broken English in the series compared to the original film seems like {{Flanderization}} at first. Then I remembered that many of the human characters are also speaking pidgin English since it's spoken widely in Hawaii in real life. Evidently, Jumba has been on Earth long enough for local styles of speech to influence how he talks.* Mertle's Flanderization (becoming an even bigger {{Jerkass}} than she was in [[Disney/LiloAndStitch the first one]], outright bullying her, etc.) seem rather odd, but then two things happen around the time the series ends. In ''[[Disney/LiloAndStitch2StitchHasAGlitch Stitch Has a Glitch]]'', which is an {{interquel}} set between ''Lilo & Stitch'' and ''WesternAnimation/StitchTheMovie'', Mertle mentions her father. Then ''Leroy & Stitch'' reveals that her dad [[DisappearedDad "ran away"]]. These two combined paint a more tragic explanation for her change in behavior: sometime between ''Stitch Has a Glitch'' and ''Stitch! The Movie,'' her parents got divorced. Confused and upset, she took her anger out on Lilo, causing her to become even more of a Jerkass than she was in the original film.* Lilo's seeming to abandon experiments in some episodes might seem like it's really out-of-character for her to do so. Then one might remember that in the original film, she spends so much time with Stitch trying to help him become a better person only for nothing to improve for her and him (or so it seemed before the climax hit), she runs out of patience with him, telling him to go away after he accidentally destroys her house in his fight with Jumba. It's pretty much the same ordeal in those episodes of ''The Series''; no matter how hard she tries, those episodes' experiments were not getting any better. She ran out of patience during those times and decided it was not worth trying to help them anymore. (In fact, this was more obvious in some episodes than in others, such as in "Heckler" when that rude experiment insulted her and the "''[='=]ohana''" and "one true place" phrases she loves.) Not to mention, she is a kid; children often don't have the best patience in the world.* It might seem odd that Gantu never really uses the threat of violence against Lilo or the other non-indestructible members of the ''[='=]ohana'' to force Stitch to give up experiments. After all, he was happy to bring Lilo along as a "snack" for Stitch in the original movie, and tried to send her to an alien zoo in ''Stitch! The Movie''. However, Gantu has experienced firsthand what it was like to be up against 626 before he met Lilo: he has a better idea than anyone of how dangerous Stitch would be if he started playing for keeps. Plus, he still thinks of Stitch as a violent abomination: Gantu may be an idiot, but he's not stupid enough to mess with the MoralityChain or MoralityPet of the super-strong, NighInvulnerable monster that also happens to know where he lives.* Why was Lilo so adamant that Stitch wasn't responsible for all the destruction in "Phantasmo" even when he seemed to be caught red-handed? [[Disney/LiloAndStitch2StitchHasAGlitch Because it's happened before.]] The last time Stitch destroyed things for no apparent reason Lilo ''did'' blame him for it, but it turned out to be because he was having seizures, and Stitch almost ''died'' in part because of Lilo pushing him away and him trying to flee to an uninhabited planet so he wouldn't be a danger to others. Lilo is determined to never make that mistake again.----!!FridgeLogic* Why were Bonnie (149) and Clyde (150) sent to prison? They might be fluent in English, making them seem more human-like than many of the other experiments, but they were still only following their programming. And many of the other experiments caused far more property damage and endangered more peoples' lives: by the same logic they could be charge with vandalism.* Wouldn't Fibber do as much harm as good in an interrogation room? Police frequently lie to suspects about what evidence they have, or accomplices snitching on them, to try to get them to confess, but Fibber would make this impossible. Perhaps a better place for him would be as a fact checker for debates, since he can detect a false statement even when the one making it believes it to be true (e.g. beeping when Bonnie claimed to be too smart for Pleakley's EARWAX therapy).